I can remember the exact moment the
idea popped into my head. It was right when I was trying to finish another story that was resisting easy closure. Two years
later, I can see that the few strands of the radio story—what Robert Lopresti
wisely calls a “magical shop” story—were inspired by two different things.
The first is a famous John Cheever
story called “The Enormous Radio.” It first ran in the New Yorker in 1947, but I first came upon it in 1981,
when a paperback collection of the writer’s work (The Stories of John Cheever) was published and
became a huge hit with people like me who’d never heard of Cheever. I bought my
copy off a mass paperback stand at K-mart.
You owe it to yourself to check out
the story. Current subscribers can read it at the New Yorker website, but for some reason you can also
find the entire text online. In the piece, a New York couple discovers that
their brand-new radio picks up conversations of people living in their
apartment building. And so ensues the kind of sordid middle-class drama that
Cheever was famous for. I don’t want to say more because it’s not my place to
do so. It’s bad enough I swiped Cheever’s premise; I’m not going to give his
ending away.
Back to our cop and his magic radio. I was probably a few hundred words into
my story when I realized my biggest plot challenge: I needed to come with as
many different audio clues as
possible for our detective to grapple with. As I quickly figured out, it’s
tricky to do that. For example, the most obvious clue is having a victim
mention the name of his or her murderer. You can only trot that one out once.
Here, two classic movies were
instructive, if only to remind me just how slight audio evidence can be. In the
1974 Coppola film The Conversation, everything hinges
on the various shades of meaning of a recorded chat between two people. We know
exactly what the two people say, but the meaning is unclear because we aren’t
privy to the subtleties of context. In DePalma’s 1981 Blow Out, the critical
sound of a car tire blowing out isn’t fraught with meaning until our hero finds
audio of the sound that immediately precedes it.
In my story, I dispensed with the
long-hanging fruit first, then worked my way up the ladder of audio complexity.
The detective’s greatest triumph comes when he identifies a murderer based on
the killer’s strange tic.
And now, since I’ve annoyingly
danced around the plots of three, no, four creative works, I should probably be
more forthright about the origins of the second big element in this story: the
so-called magical shop itself.
Weirdly, I have always been a sucker
for such shops, ever since I was a kid. For few years in my youth my father
rented an office space above an Italian deli in the New Jersey town where I
grew up. The office building was strangely trapezoidal, which meant that one
window in my Dad’s studio jutted out like the bow of a ship, overlooking the
main drag of my hometown.
My
hometown’s business district, as depicted in an old postcard, long before I
arrived on the scene. (The Blue Onion not pictured.)
|
I used to like sitting in that
window and drawing pictures of the impossible cute gift shop across the street.
If I’m not mistaken, it was called The Blue Onion, and its blue-painted,
shingle roof and gable were anomalies in an otherwise boring Jersey town filled
with pizza joints, strip malls, sanitized stucco buildings, and yes, that Kmart
I mentioned earlier. I must have sketched dozens of versions of the Blue Onion,
in all seasons, but its Christmas appearance—two front windows decked out with
twinkling lights and faux snow—was probably my favorite.
In the 1990s, I lived in Hoboken,
New Jersey, and took the train across the Hudson to New York City each morning
to go to work. From the PATH station to my job at Scholastic, I walked past a
charming shop on Bedford Street. It was the sort of place that sold antiques
and “vintage” objects side-by-side with beautiful new objects carefully curated
by the proprietor. I never went in, but I imagine that everything in it was
ridiculously expensive.
(credit: Denise Kiernan)
|
Later, when I went freelance, I conned
my way into writing a twice-monthly “destinations” column for the now long-gone
New Jersey section of the New York Times. All I did for
these pieces was chase down places in the state that trafficked in, as my gruff
editor once put it, “quaint shit.” I know it’s got a gritty reputation, but
Jersey has lot more of these sorts of places than Tony Soprano would like to
admit.
I now live in a town in North
Carolina that has quaintness in spades—shops and entire barns devoted to relics from another time. Emporia like
these always seem to promise a hell of a lot more than they deliver. But
foolishly, if I have a few minutes, I still go peek inside them. I don’t know
why. I can’t afford anything in them half the time, but still I browse. I
suppose, like my detective, I go looking for the magic.
josephdagnese.com
Oh, the Old Curiosity Shops - always, endlessly fascinating. And I think eavesdropping is something everyone does, or at least used to before texting took over talking. I think of "The Enormous Radio", "The Lives of Others", "The Conversation", "Rear Window" - all of which start with the basic premise that once you start listening in / watching, you won't be able to stop. Reality TV before it was invented. Enjoyed your story very much, BTW.
ReplyDeleteGreat story, Joe, and interesting story-behind-the-story! I love to hear what stories/movies/novels/authors serve as inspiration to writers. (I also have that Cheever collection, having gotten hooked a long time ago on "The Swimmer," one of his stories that was later a movie with Burt Lancaster.) Again, loved the column. Best to Denise.
ReplyDeleteA charming account of how stories are really made!
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by.
Joe, I enjoyed your story in AHMM.
ReplyDeleteI love those mysterious shop stories, including yours. Our own Janice Law modernized it a bit in 2018 with a man selling items from a little stand on a street in NYC. https://lbcrimes.blogspot.com/2018/02/the-crucial-game-by-janice-law.html
ReplyDeleteAnd thanks for reminding me of the movie "The Conversation." An underrated flick, I always thought. And, like "Blow Out," very much rooted in the sixties flick "Blow Up."
This is interesting. Don't know if you remember Harlan Ellison's HUGO and NEBULA AWARD winning short story "Jeffy is Five" about a boy who never grows beyong the age of five and has a radio that plays old time radio shows. Wonderful story.
ReplyDeleteNice posting.
Loved this, Joe! There are at least a couple of anthologies devoted to the "odd little shop" trope. And there was one T.V. series ("Friday the 13th the Series.") I've been bumming around knickknack shops since I was a kid! If you do another column like this, post your sketch of The Blue Onion at Christmas, I'd love to see it! (I've got to see N.J. someday; it IS "The Garden State" after all!)
ReplyDeleteHere is a long page about the Old Shop trope. https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheLittleShopThatWasntThereYesterday
ReplyDeleteOne they don't mention is Jean Shepherd's "Scut Farkus and the Murderous Mariah," in which Ralphie (the hero of the movie A Christmas Story") discovers a store called TOTAL VICTORY NEWSTAND AND NOTIONS, where he buys a fighting top...
I seem to have a lot to say about this, don't I? I meant to mention that one of the many things I love about AHMM is their willingness to publish the occasional western, fantasy, or science fiction story if it has the proper mystery element. I sold them three stories last year and one of them is arguably science fiction and another has a touch of the supernatural.
ReplyDeleteI liked the story very much, although I'm not usually big on non-real stuff. It caught and held my attention. Glad to know the background!
ReplyDelete<- I have a touch of
ReplyDeletethe supernatual, dear.
Im a NDEr.
Thanks, everyone, for the great comments. I would really have to dig to see if I still have any of my old sketches of that shop, but there is a portfolio of my old art in the basement, so who knows? Maybe I'll get lucky.
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, Rob, I think that's the cool thing about AHMM. One thing I might add that would only be of interest to other writers:
This story had one of the shortest acceptance times from AHMM in recent memory (109 days) and in accepting it, the editor said she knew that she'd read it out of order, and would get back to my others in the pipeline eventually. That's never happened to me.